Leona Reznickova
Charles University in Prague
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Featured researches published by Leona Reznickova.
Leukemia | 2008
Eva Fronkova; Ester Mejstrikova; Smadar Avigad; K. W. Chik; Luis Castillo; S. Manor; Leona Reznickova; T. Valova; Katerina Zdrahalova; Ondrej Hrusak; Y. Jabali; Martin Schrappe; Valentino Conter; Shai Izraeli; Chi Kong Li; Batia Stark; Jan Stary; Jan Trka
The ALL IC-BFM 2002 protocol was created as an alternative to the MRD-based AIEOP-BFM ALL 2000 study, to integrate early response criteria into risk-group stratification in countries not performing routine PCR-based MRD testing. ALL IC stratification comprises the response to prednisone, bone marrow (BM) morphology at days 15 and 33, age, WBC and BCR/ABL or MLL/AF4 presence. Here, we compared this stratification to the MRD-based criteria using MRD evaluation in 163 patients from four ALL IC member countries at days 8, 15 and 33 and week 12. MRD negativity at day 33 was associated with an age of 1–5 years, WBC<20 000 μl−1, non-T immunophenotype, good prednisone response and non-M3 morphology at day 15. There were no significant associations with gender or hyperdiploidy in the study group, or with TEL/AML1 fusion within BCP-ALL. Patients with M1/2 BM at day 8 tended to be MRD negative at week 12. Patients stratified into the standard-risk group had a better response than intermediate-risk group patients. However, 34% of them were MRD positive at day 33 and/or week 12. Our findings revealed that morphology-based ALL IC risk-group stratification allows the identification of most MRD high-risk patients, but fails to discriminate the MRD low-risk group assigned to therapy reduction.
Leukemia | 2014
Lucie Slamova; Julia Starkova; Eva Fronkova; Marketa Zaliova; Leona Reznickova; F van Delft; Elena Vodickova; Jana Volejnikova; Zuzana Zemanova; K Polgarova; Gunnar Cario; Maria E. Figueroa; Tomáš Kalina; Karel Fiser; J-P Bourquin; Beat C. Bornhauser; Michael Dworzak; Jan Zuna; Jan Trka; Jan Stary; Ondrej Hrusak; Ester Mejstrikova
Switches from the lymphoid to myeloid lineage during B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) treatment are considered rare and thus far have been detected in MLL-rearranged leukemia. Here, we describe a novel BCP-ALL subset, switching BCP-ALL or swALL, which demonstrated monocytosis early during treatment. Despite their monocytic phenotype, ‘monocytoids’ share immunoreceptor gene rearrangements with leukemic B lymphoblasts. All swALLs demonstrated BCP-ALL with CD2 positivity and no MLL alterations, and the proportion of swALLs cases among BCP-ALLs was unexpectedly high (4%). The upregulation of CEBPα and demethylation of the CEBPA gene were significant in blasts at diagnosis, prior to the time when most of the switching occurs. Intermediate stages between CD14negCD19posCD34pos B lymphoblasts and CD14posCD19negCD34neg ‘monocytoids’ were detected, and changes in the expression of PAX5, PU1, M-CSFR, GM-CSFR and other genes accompanied the switch. Alterations in the Ikaros and ERG genes were more frequent in swALL patients; however, both were altered in only a minority of swALLs. Moreover, switching could be recapitulated in vitro and in mouse xenografts. Although children with swALL respond slowly to initial therapy, risk-based ALL therapy appears the treatment of choice for swALL. SwALL shows that transdifferentiating into monocytic lineage is specifically associated with CEBPα changes and CD2 expression.
Haematologica | 2011
Jana Volejnikova; Ester Mejstrikova; Tatana Valova; Leona Reznickova; Ladislava Hodonska; Vladimír Mihál; Jaroslav Sterba; Yahia Jabali; Daniela Prochazkova; Bohumir Blazek; Jiri Hak; Z. Černá; Ondrej Hrusak; Jan Stary; Jan Trka; Eva Fronkova
Background Most minimal residual disease-directed treatment interventions in current treatment protocols for acute lymphoblastic leukemia are based on bone marrow testing, which is a consequence of previous studies showing the superiority of bone marrow over peripheral blood as an investigational material. Those studies typically did not explore the prognostic impact of peripheral blood involvement and lacked samples from very early time points of induction. Design and Methods In this study, we employed real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis to examine minimal residual disease in 398 pairs of blood and bone marrow follow-up samples taken from 95 children with B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated with the ALL IC-BFM 2002 protocol. Results We confirmed the previously published poor correlation between minimal residual disease in blood and marrow at early treatment time points, with levels in bone marrow being higher than in blood in most samples (median 7.9-fold, range 0.04–8,293-fold). A greater involvement of peripheral blood at diagnosis was associated with a higher white blood cell count at diagnosis (P=0.003) and with enlargement of the spleen (P=0.0004) and liver (P=0.05). At day 15, a level of minimal residual disease in blood lower than 10−4 was associated with an excellent 5-year relapse-free survival in 78 investigated patients (100% versus 69±7%; P=0.0003). Subgroups defined by the level of minimal residual disease in blood at day 15 (high-risk: ≥10−2, intermediate-risk: <10−2 and ≥10−4, standard-risk: <10−4) partially correlated with bone marrow-based stratification described previously, but the risk groups did not match completely. No other time point analyses were predictive of outcome in peripheral blood, except for a weak association at day 8. Conclusions Minimal residual disease in peripheral blood at day 15 identified a large group of patients with an excellent prognosis and added prognostic information to the risk stratification based on minimal residual disease at day 33 and week 12.
Leukemia | 2005
Eva Fronkova; Jozef Madzo; Jan Zuna; Leona Reznickova; Katerina Muzikova; Ondřej Hrušák; Jan Stary; J Trka
TEL/AML1 real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR can complement minimal residual disease assessment in childhood ALL
Blood | 2013
Julia Starkova; Karel Fiser; Eva Fronkova; Leona Reznickova; Marketa Zaliova; Kamila Polgarova; Jan Stary; Jan Trka; Ondrej Hrusak; Ester Mejstrikova
Blood | 2012
Lucie Slamova; Julia Starkova; Beat C. Bornhauser; Eva Fronkova; Marketa Zaliova; Leona Reznickova; Jana Volejnikova; Elena Vodickova; Frederik W. van Delft; Zuzana Zemanova; Gunnar Cario; Tomáš Kalina; Karel Fiser; Maria E. Figueroa; Michael Dworzak; Jan Zuna; Jan Trka; Jan Stary; Ondrej Hrusak; Jean-Pierre Bourquin; Ester Mejstrikova
Hematologica - The Hematology Journal | 2011
Jana Volejnikova; Ester Mejstříková; Tatana Valova; Leona Reznickova; Ladislava Hodonska; Vladimír Mihál; Jaroslav Štěrba; Yahia Jabali; Daniela Prochazkova; Bohumir Blazek; Jiri Hak; Z. Černá; Ondrej Hrusak; Jan Stary; J Trka; Eva Fronkova
Blood | 2008
Jana Volejnikova; Eva Fronkova; Ester Mejstrikova; Katerina Muzikova; Leona Reznickova; Dagmar Pospíšilová; Jaroslav Sterba; Yahia Jabali; Daniela Prochazkova; Bohumir Blazek; Jiri Hak; Z. Černá; Jan Stary; Jan Trka
Blood | 2007
Ester Mejstrikova; Jana Volejnikova; Eva Fronkova; Tomas Kalina; Katerina Zdrahalova; Andrea Poloučková; Elena Vodickova; Zuzana Zemanova; Leona Reznickova; Martina Vaskova; Martin Kovac; Jan Zuna; Jan Trka; Jan Stary; Ondrej Hrusak
Blood | 2006
Eva Fronkova; Smadar Avigad; Ki Wai Chik; Luis Castillo; Manor Sigal; Leona Reznickova; Katerina Zdrahalova; Tatana Skocovska; Martin Schrappe; Valentino Conter; Shai Izraeli; Chi Kong Li; Batia Stark; Ondrej Hrusak; Ester Mejstrikova; Jan Stary; Jan Trka